Unleash naval warfare on your tabletop with the Queen Anne’s Revenge, a masterfully crafted 3D printable galleon. This multi-part model is engineered for exceptional gameplay, featuring a fully modular design that allows you to separate each deck. This gives you unrestricted access to the interior, making it perfect for moving miniatures during intense RPG encounters or tactical wargames. The model boasts incredible detail, with realistic wood grain textures, ornate carvings, and accurately scaled features that will look stunning on your table. Designed for the popular 28mm/32mm scale, this ship is compatible with most tabletop gaming systems. It is optimized for both FDM and Resin 3D printers; the main hull sections are designed to be printed support-free on FDM machines, while finer details will shine with resin printing.
The Queen Anne’s Revenge holds a legendary place in maritime history as the flagship of the infamous pirate Edward ‘Blackbeard’ Teach. Her story, however, began under a different flag. Launched in Great Britain in 1710 as the ‘Concord’, she was captured by the French a year later and repurposed as a slave ship named ‘La Concorde’. In November 1717, near the island of Martinique, ‘La Concorde’ was captured by Blackbeard. He saw the vessel’s potential and heavily modified it, increasing her armament to 40 cannons, making her one of the most powerful pirate vessels of her time. He renamed her ‘Queen Anne’s Revenge’, possibly as an act of Jacobite sympathy or a nod to his service during Queen Anne’s War. For less than a year, Blackbeard’s flagship became the scourge of the Caribbean and the American eastern seaboard, blockading ports like Charleston and plundering merchant ships with impunity. The ship’s reign of terror ended abruptly in June 1718 when she ran aground at Beaufort Inlet, North Carolina, and was abandoned. The wreck was rediscovered in 1996, cementing the Queen Anne’s Revenge not just as a pirate legend, but as a tangible piece of the Golden Age of Piracy.










